this post was submitted on 09 Jul 2025
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"Reverse evolution" is simply normal evolution: mutation, selection, inheritance, in some order. It doesn't "march" in one or another direction, that's simply how we interpret it.
And, if I'm parsing the paper right, the mutation itself wasn't even reverted. It's just that additional mutations made the relevant enzyme behave more like it used to. Like twisting a wire twice, you know?
Basically when the pressure to grow bigger fruits and yields disappears, all offspring have equal changes to breed.